How Microsoft Takes a Name
An anonymous reader writes "According to a report in the "Seattle Post-Intelligencer," the Windows Defender name was already being used by an Australian developer, Adam Lyttle. His Windows Defender product protected Windows users from malicious Web sites. Adam Lyttle told the Post-Intelligencer's Todd Bishop that Microsoft contacted him a month ago, charging him with infringing on the Windows trademark but neglecting to mention that the software giant wanted to use the "Windows Defender" name. Lyttle subsequently signed over rights to the name to Microsoft and was "shocked" when he later learned the company intended to use the name for one of its own products. "
Windows Commander is now called TotalCommander. Guess why.
"Two things inspire me to awe -- the starry heavens above and the moral universe within." - Albert Einstein
A trademark is a trademark.
What the hell is that supposed to mean. Just because Microsoft has registered "Windows" as a trademark doesn't mean there aren't lots of legal ways you can use the word, especially with it being just a generic word.
Sure, but Microsoft does not have a trademark on the word Windows, not in this nor any other domain. They got Microsoft Windows trademarked. Windows is, and has been for a long time, a generic word in the computer field.
- These characters were randomly selected.
Heck, if he had been paying attention he would have realized that "Windows" isn't a registered Trademark, but that "Microsoft Windows" is instead. The trademark-ability of "Windows" featured prominently in Microsoft's case against Lindows. Microsoft *paid* Linspire over $20 million to stop using the "Lindows" trademark.
Microsoft didn't "deceive" anybody.
How do you figure - according to TFA they told him he was violating trademark laws when he wasn't.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Microsoft does have the trademark to the word "Windows" in Australia, where this happened. You can search the Australian database to confirm that: http://pericles.ipaustralia.gov.au/atmoss/falcon.a pplication_start
Of course. Bash Microsoft and you get modded up to 5.
You claim that Microsoft has no trademark on Windows. That's irrelevant. The guy decided not to fight.
According to the article, he probably was infringing on their trademark. Microsoft is under no obligation to reveal their product plans to anyone least of someone in a position to potentially profit at their expense.
Now, the guy's bitching that they didn't tell him while insisting that he would not have wanted a cut. Sounds like sour grapes to me. Now he's acting like he got the shaft while insisting that he would have given them the name freely if they had just trusted him with their confidential marketing plans.
He lost nothing that he wouldn't have given up freely, (he claims) while gaining publicity and some misguided sympathy.
Some people just have no class.
pornking
Windows alone, even in the realm of computer is in NO WAY specific to Microsoft. Every system with a GUI has Windows, and there were many such systems long before Microsoft even had a GUI themselves. There's a reason they wound up paying Lindows to rename...
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Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
Oh, and origianlly in 1993, the USPTO rejected the Windows mark:
If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
I don't know about the rest of the world, but that's certainly not true in the United States. Looking at the trademark database at the USPTO website shows that Microsoft Corporation holds the trademark "Windows"
Registration number is 1872264, serial number is 74090419.
http://www.uspto.gov/index.html
Microsoft is the corporation everyone loves to hate, but at least let's keep the facts somewhat straight.